Originally Posted By: A_Harman
Concerning the 3 wars we are now fighting:
How much oil are we getting from Afghanistan? None.
How much oil are we getting from Libya? Not much, if any. The French buy most of Qadaffy's oil.
How much oil are we getting from Iraq?
Just because we don't directly buy (much) oil from those countries, it doesn't mean that a steady supply of oil from those places doesn't have a huge impact in the price we pay. International commodities prices are much more linked than you seem to suggest.
Originally Posted By: A_Harman
Wasn't the incessant howl from the left during the Iraq war all about how it was for cheap oil? If that was the case, where's our cheap oil from the Iraqi's?
The reason(s) we were/are in Iraq are, I'm sure, many. I think it's safe to say that the energy interests are prime among them, and I think one would have to be really naive to think otherwise, given Iraq's importance in the global oil supply, whether we buy much directly from them or not. I don't see this as a partisan issue, as you seem to want to make it out to be; I see it as a simple necessity. We need a steady supply of reasonably-priced oil to keep our current standard of living in this country. Much of the oil in the world is in the middle east. These are statements of fact, not political declarations...
Originally Posted By: A_Harman
We get about 20% of our imported oil from Saudi Arabia, and the last I checked we are not fighting any wars to protect that supply. (But given the unrest in the Arab world, that could change.) The Saudi's return some of the oil money by buying our military hardware and getting training in the US so they are paying for their own defense. No "subsidy" required.
Please tell me you're kidding, right?? Do you realized that the US directly invested hundreds of millions of dollars in foreign aid to Saudi Arabia in the prior century, right? We didn't do this because we were philanthropic. And the US military presence in the middle east, whether it's in Iraq, Afghanistan or anywhere else, it still inextricably linked to security for our allies in the region. Saudi Arabia has certainly been a valuable trading partner of the US. That said, it's simply disingenuous to say "we aren't fighting a war in Saudi Arabia, so our military presence in the middle east has nothing to do with them."
Originally Posted By: A_Harman
50% of our imported oil comes from Canada, so I guess there's not much military action necessary to "subsidize" that supply.
Not even close. But don't let pesky facts get in the way... And as I said earlier, the price of oil coming from the middle east has a profound impact on the price of oil we buy from Canada.
Originally Posted By: A_Harman
So tell me; exactly how much of our military spending is applied to protecting our oil supply?
There is simply no way to parse out exactly how much we spend ensuring a steady supply of petroleum, since things don't happen in a vacuum or in isolation. What percentage of the war in the Balkans, and the Bondsteel military base were/are dedicated to development of the Trans-Balkan pipeline? These aren't simple questions with simple answers. I'll say this though; it's several orders of magnitude more than we've invested in any other forms of energy. I think any rational person would have a very difficult time disagreeing with that.
That's why, if people are going to have a rational discussion about investment about EV's, this utter nonsense of "they have to stand on there own without any government intervention" has to stop. I don't know if it's the best use of resources or not, but the fact is we're already subsidizing (heavily) petroleum, so EV's have to be looked at in this context. That's my opinion on it. Obviously, you disagree.